return ($sql, \@bind);
}
-=head2 as_query
-
-=over 4
-
-=item Arguments: $rs_attrs
-
-=item Return Value: \[ $sql, @bind ]
-
-=back
-
-Returns the SQL statement and bind vars that would result from the given
-ResultSet attributes (does not actually run a query)
-
-=cut
-
-sub as_query {
- my ($self, $rs_attr) = @_;
-
- my $sql_maker = $self->sql_maker;
- local $sql_maker->{for};
-
- # my ($op, $bind, $ident, $bind_attrs, $select, $cond, $order, $rows, $offset) = $self->_select_args(...);
- my @args = $self->_select_args($rs_attr->{from}, $rs_attr->{select}, $rs_attr->{where}, $rs_attr);
-
- # my ($sql, $bind) = $self->_prep_for_execute($op, $bind, $ident, [ $select, $cond, $order, $rows, $offset ]);
- my ($sql, $bind) = $self->_prep_for_execute(
- @args[0 .. 2],
- [ @args[4 .. $#args] ],
- );
- return \[ "($sql)", @{ $bind || [] }];
-}
sub _fix_bind_params {
my ($self, @bind) = @_;
sub _select {
my $self = shift;
+
+ # localization is neccessary as
+ # 1) there is no infrastructure to pass this around (easy to do, but will wait)
+ # 2) _select_args sets it and _prep_for_execute consumes it
my $sql_maker = $self->sql_maker;
local $sql_maker->{for};
+
return $self->_execute($self->_select_args(@_));
}
-sub _select_args {
- my ($self, $ident, $select, $condition, $attrs) = @_;
+sub _select_args_to_query {
+ my $self = shift;
- my $for = delete $attrs->{for};
+ # localization is neccessary as
+ # 1) there is no infrastructure to pass this around (easy to do, but will wait)
+ # 2) _select_args sets it and _prep_for_execute consumes it
my $sql_maker = $self->sql_maker;
- $sql_maker->{for} = $for;
+ local $sql_maker->{for};
- my $order = { map
- { $attrs->{$_} ? ( $_ => $attrs->{$_} ) : () }
- (qw/order_by group_by having _virtual_order_by/ )
- };
+ # my ($op, $bind, $ident, $bind_attrs, $select, $cond, $order, $rows, $offset)
+ # = $self->_select_args($ident, $select, $cond, $attrs);
+ my ($op, $bind, $ident, $bind_attrs, @args) =
+ $self->_select_args(@_);
+ # my ($sql, $prepared_bind) = $self->_prep_for_execute($op, $bind, $ident, [ $select, $cond, $order, $rows, $offset ]);
+ my ($sql, $prepared_bind) = $self->_prep_for_execute($op, $bind, $ident, \@args);
+ $prepared_bind ||= [];
- my $bind_attrs = {};
+ return wantarray
+ ? ($sql, $prepared_bind, $bind_attrs)
+ : \[ "($sql)", @$prepared_bind ]
+ ;
+}
+
+sub _select_args {
+ my ($self, $ident, $select, $where, $attrs) = @_;
+ my $sql_maker = $self->sql_maker;
my $alias2source = $self->_resolve_ident_sources ($ident);
+ # calculate bind_attrs before possible $ident mangling
+ my $bind_attrs = {};
for my $alias (keys %$alias2source) {
my $bindtypes = $self->source_bind_attributes ($alias2source->{$alias}) || {};
for my $col (keys %$bindtypes) {
}
}
- # This would be the point to deflate anything found in $condition
- # (and leave $attrs->{bind} intact). Problem is - inflators historically
- # expect a row object. And all we have is a resultsource (it is trivial
- # to extract deflator coderefs via $alias2source above).
- #
- # I don't see a way forward other than changing the way deflators are
- # invoked, and that's just bad...
-
- my @args = ('select', $attrs->{bind}, $ident, $bind_attrs, $select, $condition, $order);
+ my @limit;
if ($attrs->{software_limit} ||
$sql_maker->_default_limit_syntax eq "GenericSubQ") {
$attrs->{software_limit} = 1;
# MySQL actually recommends this approach. I cringe.
$attrs->{rows} = 2**48 if not defined $attrs->{rows} and defined $attrs->{offset};
- push @args, $attrs->{rows}, $attrs->{offset};
+
+ if ($attrs->{rows} && keys %{$attrs->{collapse}}) {
+ ($ident, $select, $where, $attrs)
+ = $self->_adjust_select_args_for_limited_prefetch ($ident, $select, $where, $attrs);
+ }
+ else {
+ push @limit, $attrs->{rows}, $attrs->{offset};
+ }
}
- return @args;
+
+###
+ # This would be the point to deflate anything found in $where
+ # (and leave $attrs->{bind} intact). Problem is - inflators historically
+ # expect a row object. And all we have is a resultsource (it is trivial
+ # to extract deflator coderefs via $alias2source above).
+ #
+ # I don't see a way forward other than changing the way deflators are
+ # invoked, and that's just bad...
+###
+
+ my $order = { map
+ { $attrs->{$_} ? ( $_ => $attrs->{$_} ) : () }
+ (qw/order_by group_by having _virtual_order_by/ )
+ };
+
+
+ $sql_maker->{for} = delete $attrs->{for};
+
+ return ('select', $attrs->{bind}, $ident, $bind_attrs, $select, $where, $order, @limit);
+}
+
+sub _adjust_select_args_for_limited_prefetch {
+ my ($self, $from, $select, $where, $attrs) = @_;
+
+ if ($attrs->{group_by} and @{$attrs->{group_by}}) {
+ $self->throw_exception ('Prefetch with limit (rows/offset) is not supported on resultsets with a group_by attribute');
+ }
+
+ $self->throw_exception ('Prefetch with limit (rows/offset) is not supported on resultsets with a custom from attribute')
+ if (ref $from ne 'ARRAY');
+
+
+ # separate attributes
+ my $sub_attrs = { %$attrs };
+ delete $attrs->{$_} for qw/where bind rows offset/;
+ delete $sub_attrs->{$_} for qw/for collapse select order_by/;
+
+ my $alias = $attrs->{alias};
+
+ # create subquery select list
+ my $sub_select = [ grep { $_ =~ /^$alias\./ } @{$attrs->{select}} ];
+
+ # bring over all non-collapse-induced order_by into the inner query (if any)
+ # the outer one will have to keep them all
+ if (my $ord_cnt = @{$attrs->{order_by}} - @{$attrs->{_collapse_order_by}} ) {
+ $sub_attrs->{order_by} = [
+ @{$attrs->{order_by}}[ 0 .. ($#{$attrs->{order_by}} - $ord_cnt - 1) ]
+ ];
+ }
+
+ # mangle {from}
+ $from = [ @$from ];
+ my $select_root = shift @$from;
+ my @outer_from = @$from;
+
+ my %inner_joins;
+ my %join_info = map { $_->[0]{-alias} => $_->[0] } (@$from);
+
+ # in complex search_related chains $alias may *not* be 'me'
+ # so always include it in the inner join, and also shift away
+ # from the outer stack, so that the two datasets actually do
+ # meet
+ if ($select_root->{-alias} ne $alias) {
+ $inner_joins{$alias} = 1;
+
+ while (@outer_from && $outer_from[0][0]{-alias} ne $alias) {
+ shift @outer_from;
+ }
+ if (! @outer_from) {
+ $self->throw_exception ("Unable to find '$alias' in the {from} stack, something is wrong");
+ }
+
+ shift @outer_from; # the new subquery will represent this alias, so get rid of it
+ }
+
+
+ # decide which parts of the join will remain on the inside
+ #
+ # this is not a very viable optimisation, but it was written
+ # before I realised this, so might as well remain. We can throw
+ # away _any_ branches of the join tree that are:
+ # 1) not mentioned in the condition/order
+ # 2) left-join leaves (or left-join leaf chains)
+ # Most of the join ocnditions will not satisfy this, but for real
+ # complex queries some might, and we might make some RDBMS happy.
+ #
+ #
+ # since we do not have introspectable SQLA, we fall back to ugly
+ # scanning of raw SQL for WHERE, and for pieces of ORDER BY
+ # in order to determine what goes into %inner_joins
+ # It may not be very efficient, but it's a reasonable stop-gap
+ {
+ # produce stuff unquoted, so it can be scanned
+ my $sql_maker = $self->sql_maker;
+ local $sql_maker->{quote_char};
+
+ my @order_by = (map
+ { ref $_ ? $_->[0] : $_ }
+ $sql_maker->_order_by_chunks ($sub_attrs->{order_by})
+ );
+
+ my $where_sql = $sql_maker->where ($where);
+
+ # sort needed joins
+ for my $alias (keys %join_info) {
+
+ # any table alias found on a column name in where or order_by
+ # gets included in %inner_joins
+ # Also any parent joins that are needed to reach this particular alias
+ for my $piece ($where_sql, @order_by ) {
+ if ($piece =~ /\b$alias\./) {
+ $inner_joins{$alias} = 1;
+ }
+ }
+ }
+ }
+
+ # scan for non-leaf/non-left joins and mark as needed
+ # also mark all ancestor joins that are needed to reach this particular alias
+ # (e.g. join => { cds => 'tracks' } - tracks will bring cds too )
+ #
+ # traverse by the size of the -join_path i.e. reverse depth first
+ for my $alias (sort { @{$join_info{$b}{-join_path}} <=> @{$join_info{$a}{-join_path}} } (keys %join_info) ) {
+
+ my $j = $join_info{$alias};
+ $inner_joins{$alias} = 1 if (! $j->{-join_type} || ($j->{-join_type} !~ /^left$/i) );
+
+ if ($inner_joins{$alias}) {
+ $inner_joins{$_} = 1 for (@{$j->{-join_path}});
+ }
+ }
+
+ # construct the inner $from for the subquery
+ my $inner_from = [ $select_root ];
+ for my $j (@$from) {
+ push @$inner_from, $j if $inner_joins{$j->[0]{-alias}};
+ }
+
+ # if a multi-type join was needed in the subquery ("multi" is indicated by
+ # presence in {collapse}) - add a group_by to simulate the collapse in the subq
+
+ for my $alias (keys %inner_joins) {
+
+ # the dot comes from some weirdness in collapse
+ # remove after the rewrite
+ if ($attrs->{collapse}{".$alias"}) {
+ $sub_attrs->{group_by} = $sub_select;
+ last;
+ }
+ }
+
+ # generate the subquery
+ my $subq = $self->_select_args_to_query (
+ $inner_from,
+ $sub_select,
+ $where,
+ $sub_attrs
+ );
+
+ # put it in the new {from}
+ unshift @outer_from, { $alias => $subq };
+
+ # This is totally horrific - the $where ends up in both the inner and outer query
+ # Unfortunately not much can be done until SQLA2 introspection arrives
+ #
+ # OTOH it can be seen as a plus: <ash> (notes that this query would make a DBA cry ;)
+ return (\@outer_from, $select, $where, $attrs);
}
sub _resolve_ident_sources {
$tabinfo = $_->[0];
}
- $alias2source->{$tabinfo->{-alias}} = $tabinfo->{-result_source}
- if ($tabinfo->{-result_source});
+ $alias2source->{$tabinfo->{-alias}} = $tabinfo->{-source_handle}->resolve
+ if ($tabinfo->{-source_handle});
}
}
return $alias2source;
}
-sub count {
- my ($self, $source, $attrs) = @_;
-
- my $tmp_attrs = { %$attrs };
-
- # take off any pagers, record_filter is cdbi, and no point of ordering a count
- delete $tmp_attrs->{$_} for (qw/select as rows offset page order_by record_filter/);
-
- # overwrite the selector
- $tmp_attrs->{select} = { count => '*' };
-
- my $tmp_rs = $source->resultset_class->new($source, $tmp_attrs);
- my ($count) = $tmp_rs->cursor->next;
-
- # if the offset/rows attributes are still present, we did not use
- # a subquery, so we need to make the calculations in software
- $count -= $attrs->{offset} if $attrs->{offset};
- $count = $attrs->{rows} if $attrs->{rows} and $attrs->{rows} < $count;
- $count = 0 if ($count < 0);
-
- return $count;
-}
-
-sub count_grouped {
- my ($self, $source, $attrs) = @_;
-
- # copy for the subquery, we need to do some adjustments to it too
- my $sub_attrs = { %$attrs };
-
- # these can not go in the subquery, and there is no point of ordering it
- delete $sub_attrs->{$_} for qw/prefetch collapse select as order_by/;
-
- # if we prefetch, we group_by primary keys only as this is what we would get out of the rs via ->next/->all
- # simply deleting group_by suffices, as the code below will re-fill it
- # Note: we check $attrs, as $sub_attrs has collapse deleted
- if (ref $attrs->{collapse} and keys %{$attrs->{collapse}} ) {
- delete $sub_attrs->{group_by};
- }
-
- $sub_attrs->{group_by} ||= [ map { "$attrs->{alias}.$_" } ($source->primary_columns) ];
- $sub_attrs->{select} = $self->_grouped_count_select ($source, $sub_attrs);
-
- $attrs->{from} = [{
- count_subq => $source->resultset_class->new ($source, $sub_attrs )->as_query
- }];
-
- # the subquery replaces this
- delete $attrs->{$_} for qw/where bind prefetch collapse group_by having having_bind rows offset page pager/;
-
- return $self->count ($source, $attrs);
+# Returns a counting SELECT for a simple count
+# query. Abstracted so that a storage could override
+# this to { count => 'firstcol' } or whatever makes
+# sense as a performance optimization
+sub _count_select {
+ #my ($self, $source, $rs_attrs) = @_;
+ return { count => '*' };
}
+# Returns a SELECT which will end up in the subselect
+# There may or may not be a group_by, as the subquery
+# might have been called to accomodate a limit
#
-# Returns a SELECT to go with a supplied GROUP BY
-# (caled by count_grouped so a group_by is present)
-# Most databases expect them to match, but some
-# choke in various ways.
+# Most databases would be happy with whatever ends up
+# here, but some choke in various ways.
#
-sub _grouped_count_select {
- my ($self, $source, $rs_args) = @_;
- return $rs_args->{group_by};
+sub _subq_count_select {
+ my ($self, $source, $rs_attrs) = @_;
+ return $rs_attrs->{group_by} if $rs_attrs->{group_by};
+
+ my @pcols = map { join '.', $rs_attrs->{alias}, $_ } ($source->primary_columns);
+ return @pcols ? \@pcols : [ 1 ];
}
+
sub source_bind_attributes {
my ($self, $source) = @_;
-
+
my $bind_attributes;
foreach my $column ($source->columns) {
-
+
my $data_type = $source->column_info($column)->{data_type} || '';
$bind_attributes->{$column} = $self->bind_attribute_by_data_type($data_type)
if $data_type;
return;
}
+=head2 is_datatype_numeric
+
+Given a datatype from column_info, returns a boolean value indicating if
+the current RDBMS considers it a numeric value. This controls how
+L<DBIx::Class::Row/set_column> decides whether to mark the column as
+dirty - when the datatype is deemed numeric a C<< != >> comparison will
+be performed instead of the usual C<eq>.
+
+=cut
+
+sub is_datatype_numeric {
+ my ($self, $dt) = @_;
+
+ return 0 unless $dt;
+
+ return $dt =~ /^ (?:
+ numeric | int(?:eger)? | (?:tiny|small|medium|big)int | dec(?:imal)? | real | float | double (?: \s+ precision)? | (?:big)?serial
+ ) $/ix;
+}
+
+
=head2 create_ddl_dir (EXPERIMENTAL)
=over 4